Eight teams remain as we head into the second round of the 2018 Stanley Cup Playoffs. Out of those eight teams, my pick to win the Stanley Cup is the Vegas Golden Knights.
Stanley Cup 2021: Favorites, Dark Horses, and Their Odds to Win It All Ryan Bristlon - March 2, 2021 The NHL is tentatively expected to return this month and the first puck drop of the season is expected to take place Wednesday, January 13 with five games set to take place.
At the start of the season, they had the longest odds to win it all, but they shocked the world in the regular season by making expansion team history on multiple occasions and winning the Pacific division. Even though they were a top seed, fans and analysts were skeptical about how they would fare in their first ever playoff series against the experienced Los Angeles Kings. The Golden Knights once again shocked the world by sweeping the Kings in four games and are now co-favorites to win the Stanley Cup according to the Westgate Sportsbook.
The Golden Knights went from a team that seemed to be destined for the bottom of the standings to a Stanley Cup favorite so why not keep making history?
The Golden Knights goaltender, Marc-Andre Fleury, is a seasoned veteran and is also a three-time champion. He’s playing some of the best hockey of his career and if he can keep it up, there’s no reason the Golden Knights can’t defeat any of the remaining playoff teams.
Not only do the Golden Knights have Fleury, they also boast a roster of breakout stars and hungry veterans. Some of those breakout stars include William Karlsson, who lead the team with 43 goals and 78 points, and Jonathan Marchessault, who finished the regular season with 75 points.
The veterans include David Perron, who had his best year of his career this season, and James Neal, who also had a solid year and is looking to make a statement after the Nashville Predators let him go in the expansion draft this past summer.
This team started the season with little to no expectations. A group of determined players looking to make names for themselves, or statements to their former teams who let them go in the expansion draft came together to become one of the top teams in the league. While their regular season accomplishments alone make their inaugural season a huge success, the Vegas Golden Knights still have their foot on the gas pedal and aren’t done making history just yet.
Among hockey fans (and on Twitter), he’s known as the Keeper of the Cup. But his real name is Phil Pritchard, he’s the curator at the Hockey Hall of Fame in Toronto and he’s been taking care of the Stanley Cup — which is not its real name — for 30 years.
But he’s one of several people who travel with the Cup in the summer as the winning team and players pass it around, as well as during the NHL season when it visits a variety of events. He estimates that he personally travels with it for more than 100 days annually.
Ahead of the Stanley Cup Final between the Washington Capitals and the Vegas Golden Knights — which begins Monday in Las Vegas — For The Win spoke with Pritchard about what it’s like to take care of the Cup and his favorite memories with the most coveted trophy in sports.
This interview has been condensed and edited for clarity.
I had to take it to a charity event just north of Toronto. It was my first week on the job in 1988, we had a very small staff and it was a Friday night. And our boss asked if someone wanted to take it up to Newmarket, Ontario for a charity event. And no one really said anything, so I said, “Well, I’m the new guy. Sure, I’ll go.” So I put up my hand, and I guess, in a way, I’ve been putting up my hand ever since.
It’s amazing because it’s 125 years old this year, and it looks as great now as it did 20 years ago, 40 years ago, 60 years ago. Because it’s pure silver, the upkeep and preservation on it is huge. Every day we are cleaning it, no matter where we go. It looks unbelievable, but I guess I’m kind of biased.
I’ve kept every pair that I’ve ever worn for some reason. I guess that’s the curatorial collector in me. So I have them all at home. I’m not sure what I’ll do with them, maybe bring them back here or throw them out. I go through a pair every two to three weeks. So I’ve got a lot.
In a way, it is that. We always kid ourselves that that’s our workout for the day when we’re carrying it. But the neat thing hockey has is its traditions, and one of them is you can pick it up and hoist it over your head once you’ve won it. I’ve never hoisted it over my head. I’ve carried it, obviously. But I really feel strongly that if you don’t win it, you don’t pick it up. It’s an honor to travel with it and carry it like that, but it’s there for the guys that have won it. If your name’s on it, you can pick it up any time.
When you go out to eastern Canada with fishing and seafood, someone always wants to put a lobster in it. When you go to Finland, Finnish culture’s all about saunas and outdoors, so we’re probably going to a sauna. In Russia, vodka is the cheers of choice, so vodka’s going to be drank out of it. We’ve been to Detroit numerous times, so octopus has been in there.
We’ve been backpacking in Colorado, a baby has been christened in it, we go to cemeteries for loved ones, it’s been used for raffles when you pick a name out of the Cup. I think it genuinely has a life of its own. It’s an inanimate object that’s lifelike, and people look at it that way.
Tomas Kopecky and the Blackhawks had won a few years ago, we took it back to his hometown in Slovakia. He always bragged that he was going to have his mom’s soup out of that. Translated into English, the soup is called “the inside of the stomach of a cow soup.” I don’t know how you say it in Slovakian, but that’s how he said it to me in English. And I didn’t eat the soup out of the Cup because I haven’t won it, but I did have the soup, and it was really good.
Because we’re in Toronto, we often cross borders and go into the United States or go overseas because a lot of players live over there, and we travel with them in the summer. So we work closely with the airlines, closely with the hotels, TSA, customs and all that to make sure every security point that we’re going to be traveling through knows we’re coming.
It’s kind of neat because the Cup gets checked like regular baggage, but it goes in a special compartment under most planes. And then we get off the plane and meet it at oversized baggage claim and the road show continues.
Exactly. In a lot of places, depending on the airport, some of the grounds crewmen will bring it to you, but some of them will push it down the oversized ramp. The strollers, the golf clubs, the Stanley Cup.
Unfortunately. We all know airline travel has changed over the years, so we have to make sure that happens. But unfortunately, sometimes it does miss its flight just like your luggage or my luggage does.
Never. Even if I did, I probably wouldn’t tell you. But it has been dropped before, and there are some dents in it. It’s really amazing because in the dressing room after it’s won, dressing rooms are designed for 40 people and there’s like 500 in there. Amazingly, it lives through another day.
We’ve put it on a table and a leg has fallen out and the Cup has tipped over. Human error happens. It’s a lot tougher with social media, so everybody sees it. So by the time you’ve fixed the Cup, it’s already on social media or the news.
In 1993, it was the 100th anniversary of the Stanley Cup, and the Canadiens were hosting the All-Star Game. And during the pregame ceremony, Rocket Richard was a little older a the time and fell on the Cup. It caved in part of it. He was fine, but the Cup was kind of dented a bit in the barrel at the biggest part. In the back room with the zamboni guys and all their tools, we took the cup apart, knocked the dent from the inside out, and it was ready for display after the game.
Walking out on the red carpet on the ice on the night it’s about to be presented is always special. To be part of that, it’s really unique, and we’re really fortunate to be close to something historic that’s happening.
The annoucer says, “Ladies and gentlemen, the Stanley Cup.” It’s pretty amazing to be standing at center ice with the Stanely Cup on the table, and there’s 20,000 people going crazy. You can see the look in the players’ eyes that have just won, and they’re waiting for the chance to hoist it over their head.
Honestly, my big thing is not to step on a television or radio wire because we don’t want to become a YouTube moment. But chills go up my spine every time I carry it because I’m walking around with sports’ greatest trophy. But once you’re out on the ice and see that passion. It’s exciting, it’s powerful and it’s emotional.